Patricia and Richard Logan Have Adopted Five Kids with Cerebral Palsy

When Patricia and Richard Logan agreed to foster a blind 11-year-old girl with cerebral palsy 22 years ago, it was an easy decision.

“We got really attached to Michelle,” says Patricia, 60, of Warren, Mich. “I wanted to give her the best life she could ever have.”

It went so well that not only did they adopt her, they later adopted four more children with cerebral palsy.

“Everyone needs a loving home,” says Patricia, who worked at a nursing home before deciding to care for their special-needs children full time.

“If I had a bigger home I would adopt even more,” she says.

It all began when Patricia’s friend told her she should consider being a foster parent to Michelle.

Already a birth mother to three children, and now a grandmother to six, she talked to her husband, Richard, and they decided to give it a shot.

Caring for her was not easy but Patricia didn’t mind.

“She is blind so she gets nervous about sounds,” she says. “When it would storm, I would put her on my lap on the rocking chair.”

Difficult Decision

ShanaCourtesy Patricia and Richard LoganLess than a year later the Logans received a call from their local adoption agency asking them if they could foster a 16-year-old named Jerry until they found him a permanent home.

Suffering from a rare neurological and skin disorder called Sturge-Weber syndrome and cerebral palsy, he passed away when he was just 23 years old.

“Taking him off the ventilator was the hardest decision I ever had to make,” says Patricia.

“That was a low point,” she says. “I knew I could never go through that again.”

Somehow, though, she found the strength to risk a broken heart three more times.

They have raised Evan, 31; Jason, 23; and Shana, 29, as their own, with daily family meals, pool time in the summer and walks in the park on nice days.

“It’s not always easy,” says Patricia.

“Your day can be going fine,” she says, “and then all of the sudden somebody is having a seizure and you have to go the hospital.”

Grateful Biological Parents

MichelleCourtesy Patricia and Richard LoganThe biological parents of the children are close with the Logans and say they are grateful to them for caring for their kids.

“They have this calmness about them that lets them deal with one thing after another each day,” says Evan’s father, Dwight Cendrowski, 61, of Ann Arbor, Mich.

“They were my lifesaver,” he says, “when I realized I couldn’t care for him the way he needed to be cared for.”

Saveta Lynch, Michelle’s birth mother, says she can sleep at night because of the Logans.

“I sometimes feel guilty because I think that I couldn’t care for one child with special needs and they take care of four,” says Lynch, 61, who lives nearby in Novi, Mich.

ShanaCourtesy Patricia and Richard Logan“They make me feel like I never gave her up,” she says. “Like it’s not a big deal they’re taking care of her.”